Cfa image with synthetic panchromatic image

ABSTRACT

A method for forming a final digital color image with reduced motion blur including of a processor for providing images having panchromatic pixels and color pixels corresponding to at least two color photo responses, interpolating between the panchromatic pixels and color pixels to produce a panchromatic image and a full-resolution color image to produce a fall-resolution synthetic panchromatic image from the fill-resolution color image; and developing color correction weights in response to the synthetic panchromatic image and the panchromatic image; and using the color correction weights to modify the fill-resolution color image to provide a final color digital image.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to color filter array images having color channels and a panchromatic channel and more particularly to providing an improved full-resolution color image with reduced motion blur.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

An electronic imaging system depends on a lens system to form an image on an electronic image sensor to create an electronic representation of a visual image. Examples of such electronic image sensors include charge coupled device (CCD) image sensors and active pixel sensor (APS) devices (APS devices are often referred to as CMOS sensors because of the ability to fabricate them in a Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor process). A sensor comprises a two-dimensional array of individual picture element sensors, or pixels. Each pixel is typically provided with either a red, green, or blue filter, as described by Bayer in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 3,971,065 issued Jul. 20, 1976, so that a color image can be produced. Regardless of electronic technology employed, e.g., CCD or CMOS, the pixel acts as a bucket in which photoelectrons are accumulated in direct proportion to amount of light that strikes the pixel during the capture of an image by the electronic imaging system.

Not all of the light that enters the front optical element of an electronic imaging system strikes a pixel. Much of the light is lost when passing through the optical path of the electronic imaging system. Typically, about 5% of the light is lost due to lens reflections and haze and about 60% is lost because of the color filter array. Moreover, some of the light strikes areas of the pixel that are not light sensitive. To gather the amount of light that is needed to make a correct exposure, the electronic imaging sensor gathers light for an interval of time called the exposure time. Based on brightness measurements of the scene to be imaged, an automatic exposure control is typically employed to determine a suitable exposure time that will yield an image with effective brightness. The dimmer the scene, the larger the amount of time the electronic imaging system need; to gather light to make a correct exposure. It is well known, however, that longer exposures can result in blurry images. This blur can be the result of objects moving in a scene. It can also be produced when the image capture device is moving relative to the scene during capture.

One method to reduce blur is to shorten the exposure time. However, this method under-exposes the electronic image sensor during image capture so dark images are generated. An analog or digital gain can be applied to the image signal to brighten the dark images, but those skilled in the art will recognize that this will result in noisy images.

Another method to reduce blur is to shorten the exposure time and preserve more of the light that passes through the optical path and direct it to the pixels of the electronic image sensor. This method can produce images with reduced blur and acceptable noise levels. However, the current industry trend in electronic imaging systems is to make imaging systems smaller and less expensive. High-grade optical elements with large apertures, which can gather more light and preserve more light passing through them, are therefore not practicable.

Another method to reduce blur is to shorten the exposure time and supplement the available light with a photographic flash. A photographic flash produces a strong light flux that is sustained for a fraction of a second and the exposure time is set to encompass the flash time. The exposure time can be set to a significantly shorter interval than without a flash since the photographic flash is strong. Therefore, the blur during the exposure is reduced. However, flash photography is only practical if the distance between the flash and the object is relatively small. Additionally, a flash adds extra cost and weight to an image capture device.

U.S. Pat. No. 6,441,848 issued Aug. 27, 2002 to Tull describes a digital camera with an electronic image sensor that removes object motion blur by monitoring the rate at which electrons are collected by each pixel. If the rate at which light strikes a pixel varies, then the brightness of the image that the pixel is viewing is assumed to be changing. When a circuit built into the sensor array detects that the image brightness is changing, the amount of charge collected is preserved and the time at which brightness change was detected is recorded. Each pixel value where exposure was stopped is adjusted to the proper value by linearly extrapolating the pixel value so that the pixel value corresponds to the dynamic range of the entire image. A disadvantage of this approach is that the extrapolated pixel values of an object that is already in motion when the exposure begins are highly uncertain. The image brightness, as seen by the sensor, never has a constant value and, therefore, the uncertainty in the extrapolated pixel values results in an image with motion artifacts. Another disadvantage is that it uses specialized hardware so that it cannot be used with the conventional electronic image sensors that are used in current commercial cameras.

Another method to reduce blur is to capture two images, one with a short exposure time, and one with a long exposure time. The short exposure time is selected so as to generate an image that is noisy, but relatively free of notion blur. The long exposure time is selected so as to generate an image that has little noise, but that can have significant motion blur. Image processing algorithms are used to combine the two captures into one final output image. Such approaches are described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,239,342, U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2006/0017837, U.S. Patent Application Publication 2006/0187308 and U.S. Patent Application Publication 2007/0223831. The drawbacks of these approaches include a requirement for additional buffer memory to store multiple images, additional complexity to process multiple images, and difficulty resolving object motion blur.

Another method to reduce blur is to shorten exposure time and preserve more light passing through the color filter array. For silicon-based image sensors, the pixel components themselves are broadly sensitive to visible light, permitting unfiltered pixels to be suitable for capturing a monochrome image. For capturing color images, a two-dimensional pattern of filters is typically fabricated on the pattern of pixels, with different filter materials used to make individual pixels sensitive to only a portion of the visible light spectrum. An example of such a pattern of filters is the well-known Bayer color filter array pattern, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,971,065. The Bayer color filter array has advantages for obtaining full color images under typical conditions; however, this solution has been found to have its drawbacks. Although filters are needed to provide narrow-band spectral response, any filtering of the incident light tends to reduce the amount of light that reaches each pixel, thereby reducing the effective light sensitivity of each pixel and reducing pixel response speed.

As solutions for improving image capture under varying light conditions and for improving overall sensitivity of the imaging sensor, modifications to the familiar Bayer pattern have been disclosed. For example, commonly assigned U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2007/0046807 entitled “Capturing Images Under Varying Lighting Conditions” by Hamilton et al. and U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2007/0024931 entitled “Image Sensor with Improved Light Sensitivity” by Compton et al. both describe alternative sensor arrangements that combine color filters with panchromatic filter elements, spatially interleaved in some manner. With this type of solution, some portion of the image sensor detects color; the other panchromatic portion is optimized to detect light spanning the visible band for improved dynamic range and sensitivity. These solutions thus provide a pattern of pixels, some pixels with color filters (providing a narrow-band spectral response) and some without (unfiltered “panchromatic” pixels or pixels filtered to provide a broad-band spectral response). This solution is not sufficient, however, to allow high quality images without motion blur to be captured under low-light conditions because color pixels are still subject to motion blur.

Another method to reduce blur and capture images in low-light scenarios, known in the fields of astrophotography and remote sensing, is to capture two images: a panchromatic image with high spatial resolution and a multi-spectral image with low spatial resolution. The images are fused to generate a multi-spectral image with high spatial resolution. Such approaches are described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,340,099, U.S. Pat. No. 6,011,875 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,097,835. The drawbacks of these approaches include a requirement for additional buffer memory to store multiple images, and difficulty resolving object motion blur.

Another method that can be used to reduce motion blur is to use an image stabilization system having moveable lens system or special imager positioning hardware. Such systems are designed to keep the image in a stable position on the sensor. However, these systems have the disadvantage that they are complex and costly. Additionally, they do not address the case where objects in the scene are moving at different velocities.

Thus, there exists a need for producing an improved color filter array image or color image having color and panchromatic pixels, having reduced motion blur, by using conventional electronic image sensors, without the use of a photographic flash, without increasing image noise, and without significant additional cost or complexity or memory requirements.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

In accordance with the present invention, there is provided a method for forming a final digital color image with reduced motion blur comprising one or more processors for providing the following steps:

(a) providing images having panchromatic pixels and color pixels corresponding to at least two color photo responses;

(b) interpolating between the panchromatic pixels and color pixels to produce a full-resolution panchromatic image and a full-resolution color image;

(c) producing a full-resolution synthetic panchromatic image from the full-resolution color image;

(d) developing color correction weights in response to the full-resolution synthetic panchromatic image and the full-resolution panchromatic image; and

(e) using the color correction weights to modify the fill-resolution color image to provide a final color digital image.

An advantage of the present invention is that improved full-resolution color images with reduced blur can be produced with basic changes to the image processing software without having to use a photographic flash or long exposure times to properly expose a single image.

A further advantage of the present invention is that full-resolution color images with reduced image capture device induced blur can be produced without the need for a costly image stabilization system having moveable lens system or special imager positioning hardware.

A further advantage of the present invention is that full-resolution color images with reduced blur can be produced without increased buffer memory requirements for storing multiple images.

This and other aspects, objects, features, and advantages of the present invention will be more clearly understood and appreciated from a review of the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments and appended claims, and by reference to the accompanying drawings.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a digital camera for implementing the present invention;

FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a preferred embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 3 is a view of a color filter array pattern for the present invention;

FIG. 4 is a schematic diagram showing how pixels in adjacent rows can be binned together, sharing the same floating diffusion component;

FIG. 5 is a view of the pixel readouts from a portion of the image sensor from one possible binning strategy;

FIG. 6 provides representative spectral quantum efficiency curves for red, green, and blue pixels, as well as a wider spectrum panchromatic quantum efficiency, all multiplied by the transmission characteristics of an infrared cut filter; and

FIG. 7 is a block diagram showing step 214 of FIG. 2 in more detail.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

In the following description, a preferred embodiment of the present invention will be described in terms that would ordinarily be implemented as a software program. Those skilled in the art will readily recognize that the equivalent of such software can also be constructed in hardware. Because image manipulation algorithms and systems are well known, the present description will be directed in particular to algorithms and systems forming part of, or cooperating more directly with, the system and method in accordance with the present invention. Other aspects of such algorithms and systems, and hardware or software for producing and otherwise processing the image signals involved therewith, not specifically shown or described herein, can be selected from such systems, algorithms, components and elements known in the art. Given the system as described according to the invention in the following materials, software not specifically shown, suggested or described herein that is useful for implementation of the invention is conventional and within the ordinary skill in such arts.

Still further, as used herein, the computer program for performing the method of the present invention can be stored in a computer readable storage medium, which can include, for example; magnetic storage media such as a magnetic disk (such as a hard drive or a floppy disk) or magnetic tape; optical storage media such as an optical disc, optical tape, or machine readable bar code; solid state electronic storage devices such as random access memory (RAM), or read only memory (ROM); or any other physical device or medium employed to store a computer program.

Because digital cameras employing imaging devices and related circuitry for signal capture and correction and for exposure control are well known, the present description will be directed in particular to elements forming part of, or cooperating more directly with, the method and apparatus in accordance with the present invention. Elements not specifically shown or described herein ire selected from those known in the art. Certain aspects of the embodiments to be described are provided in software. Given the system as shown and described according to the invention in the following materials, software not specifically shown, described or suggested herein that is useful for implementation of the invention is conventional and within the ordinary skill in such arts.

Turning now to FIG. 1, a block diagram of an image capture device shown as a digital camera embodying the present invention is shown. Although a digital camera will now be explained, the present invention is clearly applicable to other types of image capture devices. In the disclosed camera, light from the subject scene 10 is input to an imaging stage 11, where the light is focused by lens 12 to form an image on a solid state image sensor 20. Image sensor 20 converts the incident light to an electrical signal for each picture element (pixel). The image sensor 20 of the preferred embodiment is a charge coupled device (CCD) type or an active pixel sensor (APS) type (APS devices are often referred to as CMOS sensors because of the ability to fabricate them in a Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor process). Other types of image sensors having two-dimensional array of pixels can also be used provided that they employ the patterns of the present invention. The present invention also makes use of the image sensor 20 having a two-dimensional array of color and panchromatic pixels as will become clear later in this specification after FIG. 1 is described.

The amount of light reaching the sensor 20 is regulated by an iris block 14 that varies the aperture and a neutral density (ND) filter block 13 that includes one or more ND filters interposed in the optical path. Also regulating the overall light level is the time that a shutter 18 is open. An exposure controller 40 responds to the amount of light available in the scene as metered by a brightness sensor block 16 and controls all three of these regulating functions.

This description of a particular camera configuration will be familiar to one skilled in the art, and it will be obvious that many variations and additional features are present. For example, an autofocus system can be added, or the lens can be detachable and interchangeable. It will be understood that the present invention can be applied to any type of digital camera, where similar functionality is provided by alternative components. For example, the digital camera can be a relatively simple point and shoot digital camera, where the shutter 18 is a relatively simple movable blade shutter, or the like, instead of the more complicated focal plane arrangement. The present invention can also be practiced on imaging components included in non-camera devices such as mobile phones and automotive vehicles.

The analog signal from image sensor 20 is processed by analog signal processor 22 and applied to analog to digital (A/D) converter 24. A timing generator 26 produces various clocking signals to select rows and pixels and synchronizes the operation of analog signal processor 22 and A/D converter 24. An image sensor stage 28 includes the image sensor 20, the analog signal processor 22, the A/D converter 24, and the timing generator 26. The components of image sensor stage 28 can be separately fabricated integrated circuits, or they can be fabricated as a single integrated circuit as is commonly done with CMOS image sensors. The resulting stream of digital pixel values from A/D converter 24 is stored in a digital signal processor (DSP) memory 32 associated with a digital signal processor (DSP) 36.

The DSP 36 is one of three processors or controllers in this embodiment, in addition to a system controller 50 and an exposure controller 40. Although this partitioning of camera functional control among multiple controllers and processors is typical, these controllers or processors can be combined in various ways without affecting the functional operation of the camera and the application of the present invention. These controllers or processors can include one or more digital signal processor devices, microcontrollers, programmable logic devices, or other digital logic circuits. Although a combination of such controllers or processors has been described, it should be apparent that one controller or processor can be designated to perform all of the needed functions. All of these variations can perform the same function and fall within the scope of this invention, and the term “processing stage” will be used as needed to encompass all of this functionality within one phrase, for example, as in processing stage 38 in FIG. 1.

In the illustrated embodiment, DSP 36 manipulates the digital image data in the DSP memory 32 according to a software program permanently stored in a program memory 54 and copied to DSP memory 32 for execution during image capture. DSP 36 executes the software necessary for practicing image processing shown in FIG. 18. DSP memory 32 can be any type of random access memory, such as SDRAM. The bus 30 including a pathway for address and data signals connects DSP 36 to its related DSP memory 32, A/D converter 24 and other related devices.

System controller 50 controls the overall operation of the camera based on a software program stored in program memory 54, which can include Flash EEPROM or other nonvolatile memory. This memory can also be used to store image sensor calibration data, user setting selections and other data which must be preserved when the camera is turned off. System controller 50 controls the sequence of image capture by directing exposure controller 40 to operate the lens 12, ND filter block 13, iris block 14, and shutter 18 as previously described, directing the timing generator 26 to operate the image sensor 20 and associated elements, and directing DSP 36 to process the captured image data. After an image is captured and processed, the final image file stored in DSP memory 32 is transferred to a host computer via host interface 57, stored on a removable memory card 64 or other storage device, and displayed for the user on an image display 88.

A system controller bus 52 includes a pathway for address, data and control signals, and connects system controller 50 to DSP 36, program memory 54, a system memory 56, host interface 57, a memory card interface 60 and other related devices. Host interface 57 provides a high speed connection to a personal computer (PC) or other host computer for transfer of image data for display, storage, manipulation or printing. This interface can be an IEEE1394 or USB2.0 serial interface or any other suitable digital interface. Memory card 64 is typically a Compact Flash (CF) card inserted into memory card socket 62 and connected to the system controller 50 via memory card interface 60. Other types of storage that can be utilized include without limitation PC-Cards, MultiMedia Cards (MMC), or Secure Digital (SD) cards.

Processed images are copied to a display buffer in system memory 56 and continuously read out via video encoder 80 to produce a video signal. This signal is output directly from the camera for display on an external monitor, or processed by display controller 82 and presented on image display 88. This display is typically an active matrix color liquid crystal display (LCD), although other types of displays are used as well.

A user interface 68, including all or any combination of a viewfinder display 70, an exposure display 72, a status display 76, the image display 88, and user inputs 74, is controlled by a combination of software programs executed on exposure controller 40 and system controller 50. User inputs 74 typically include some combination of buttons, rocker switches, joysticks, rotary dials or touchscreens. Exposure controller 40 operates light metering, exposure mode, autofocus and other exposure functions. The system controller 50 manages a graphical user interface (GUI) presented on one or more of the displays, e.g., on image display 88. The GUI typically includes menus for making various option selections and review modes for examining captured images.

Exposure controller 40 accepts user inputs selecting exposure mode, lens aperture, exposure time (shutter speed), and exposure index or ISO speed rating and directs the lens 12 and shutter 18 accordingly for subsequent captures. The brightness sensor block 16 is employed to measure the brightness of the scene and provide an exposure meter function for the user to refer to when manually setting the ISO speed rating, aperture and shutter speed. In this case, as the user changes one or more settings, the light meter indicator presented on viewfinder display 70 tells the user to what degree the image will be over or underexposed. In an automatic exposure mode, the user changes one setting and the exposure controller 40 automatically alters another setting to maintain correct exposure, e.g., for a given ISO speed rating when the user reduces the lea-s aperture, the exposure controller 40 automatically increases the exposure time to maintain the same overall exposure.

The ISO speed rating is an important attribute of a digital still camera. The exposure time, the lens aperture, the lens transmittance, the level and spectral distribution of the scene illumination, and the scene reflectance determine the exposure level of a digital still camera. When an image from a digital still camera is obtained using an insufficient exposure, proper tone reproduction can generally be maintained by increasing the electronic or digital gain, but the resulting image will often contain an unacceptable amount of noise. As the exposure is increased, the gain is decreased, and therefore the image noise can normally be reduced to an acceptable level. If the exposure is increased excessively, the resulting signal in bright areas of the image can exceed the maximum signal level capacity of the image sensor or camera signal processing. This can cause image highlights to be clipped to form a uniformly bright area, or to “bloom” into surrounding areas of the image. Therefore, it is important to guide the user in setting proper exposures. An ISO speed rating is intended to serve as such a guide. In order to be easily understood by photographers, the ISO speed rating for a digital still camera should directly relate to the ISO speed rating for photographic film cameras. For example, if a digital still camera has an ISO speed rating of ISO 200, then the same exposure time and aperture should be appropriate for an ISO 200 rated film/process system.

The ISO speed ratings are intended to harmonize with film ISO speed ratings. However, there are differences between electronic and film-based imaging systems that preclude exact equivalency. Digital still cameras can include variable gain, and can provide digital processing after the image data has been captured, enabling tone reproduction to be achieved over a range of camera exposures. It is therefore possible for digital still cameras to have a range of speed ratings. This range is defined as the ISO speed latitude. To prevent confusion, a single value is designated as the inherent ISO speed rating, with the ISO speed latitude upper and lower limits indicating the speed range, that is, a range including effective speed ratings that differ from the inherent ISO speed rating. With this in mind, the inherent ISO speed is a numerical value calculated from the exposure provided at the focal plane of a digital still camera to produce specified camera output signal characteristics. The inherent speed is usually the exposure index value that produces peak image quality for a given camera system for normal scenes, where the exposure index is a numerical value that is inversely proportional to the exposure provided to the image sensor.

The foregoing description of a digital camera will be familiar to one skilled in the art. It will be obvious that there are many variations of this embodiment that are possible and are selected to reduce the cost, add features or improve the performance of the camera. The following description will disclose in detail the operation of this camera for capturing images according to the present invention. Although this description is with reference to a digital camera, it will be understood that the present invention applies for use with any type of image capture device having an image sensor with color and panchromatic pixels.

The image sensor 20 shown in FIG. 1 typically includes a two-dimensional array of light sensitive pixels fabricated on a silicon substrate that provide a way of converting incoming light at each pixel into an electrical signal that is measured. As the image sensor 20 is exposed to light, free electrons are generated and captured within the electronic structure at each pixel. Capturing these free electrons for some period of time and then measuring the number of electrons captured, or measuring the rate at which free electrons are generated can measure the light level at each pixel. In the former case, accumulated charge is shifted out of the array of pixels to a charge to voltage measurement circuit as in a charge coupled device (CCD), or the area close to each pixel can contain elements of a charge to voltage measurement circuit as in an active pixel sensor (APS or CMOS sensor).

Whenever general reference is made to an image sensor in the following description, it is understood to be representative of the image sensor 20 from FIG. 1. It is further understood that all examples and their equivalents of image sensor architectures and pixel patterns of the present invention disclosed in this specification is used for image sensor 20.

In the context of an image sensor, a pixel (a contraction of “picture element”) refers to a discrete light sensing area and charge shifting or charge measurement circuitry associated with the light sensing area. In the context of a digital color image, the term pixel commonly refers to a particular location in the image having associated color values.

FIG. 2 is a high level diagram of the preferred embodiment of the present invention representing a processor for carrying out the steps of the present invention. An image sensor 20 (FIG. 1) captures a color filter array image containing a panchromatic channel 202 and color channels 204 corresponding to at least two color photo responses. The color filter array can contain red, green, blue and panchromatic pixels, although other channel combinations are possible, such as cyan, magenta, yellow and panchromatic. Of particular importance is the inclusion of a panchromatic channel. The color filter array image is captured in such a way that the panchromatic channel is exposed to light for a different length of time than at least one of the color channels. The panchromatic channel will generally have a different exposure time than each of the color channels, and the exposure intervals arranged such that they conclude concurrently.

A CFA interpolation block 206 produces a full-resolution panchromatic image 208 and a full-resolution color image 210 from a color filter array image captured by the digital camera (FIG. 1). The fill-resolution color image 210 is used to compute a full-resolution synthetic panchromatic image 212. In a preferred embodiment, the full-resolution synthetic panchromatic image 212 is calculated as the weighted linear combination of red, green and blue color channels of the full-resolution color image 210. The weightings of the red, green and blue color channels of the full-resolution color image produced by block 210 are chosen such that the computed full-resolution synthetic panchromatic image 212 is comparable to the full-resolution panchromatic image 208.

In the final step, the full-resolution panchromatic image 208, the full-resolution color image 210 and the full-resolution synthetic panchromatic image 212 are used to generate an improved fall-resolution color image with reduced motion blur 214.

The individual steps outlined in FIG. 2 will now be described in greater detail. Initially, a digital camera (FIG. 1) captures a color filter array image. FIG. 3 illustrates an example color filter array pattern 301 for the preferred embodiment. In this example, approximately half of the pixels are panchromatic pixels 302, while the other half are split among red pixels 304, green pixels 306 and blue pixels 308.

The exposure period for the panchromatic pixels is shorter than the exposure period for the color pixels. This allows the panchromatic data to be captured with a short exposure time thereby preventing excessive motion blur, while also allowing color data to be captured with sufficient exposure to reduce color noise artifacts.

Various pixel-binning schemes are possible during readout of the image sensor, as noted in FIG. 4. In FIG. 4, two partial rows of an image sensor are displayed, a first partial row of image sensor 401 and a second partial row of image sensor 402. In this embodiment, the underlying readout circuitry for a sensor array uses a floating diffusion 404 that is switchably connected to one or more surrounding pixels at a time. Implementation and use of the floating diffusion 404 is well known to those skilled in the digital image acquisition art. FIG. 4 shows a conventional arrangement in which each floating diffusion 404 serves four surrounding pixels, shown in one example as a pixel quartet 406.

Pixel signals can be switched to floating diffusion 404 in any of a number of combinations. In a first readout combination 408, each pixel in quartet 406 has its charge transferred separately to floating diffusion 404 and thus is read individually. In a second readout combination 410, panchromatic pixels P are binned, that is, they share floating diffusion 404 by emptying their stored charge to floating diffusion 404 at the same time; similarly, both color (G) pixels in the quartet are binned, switching their signals at the same time to floating diffusion 404. In a third readout combination 412, panchromatic pixels P are not binned, but are read separately; while the color pixels (G) are binned.

In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the panchromatic pixels for the panchromatic channel 202 (FIG. 2) are not binned, while color pixels for the color channels 204 (FIG. 2) are binned 412, resulting in the readouts illustrated in FIG. 5. In FIG. 5, the panchromatic pixels 502 occupy a checkerboard pattern, while the color pixels 504 collectively form a low resolution Bayer pattern.

The CFA interpolation block 206 (FIG. 2) produces a full-resolution panchromatic image 208 (FIG. 2) and a fill-resolution color image 210 (FIG. 2) using a color filter array image containing a panchromatic channel 202 (FIG. 2) and color channels 204 (FIG. 2). Methods for performing CFA interpolation are well known in the art. For example, the CFA interpolation method described in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2007/0024934, which is incorporated herein by reference, can be used.

After CFA interpolation block 206 has produced a full-resolution color image 210, the fill-resolution color image 210 is used to compute a full-resolution synthetic panchromatic image 212. A computationally simple calculation for computing the fill-resolution synthetic panchromatic image 212 is given by L=R+2G+B, where L is the pixel value of fill-resolution synthetic panchromatic image 212 (FIG. 2) and R, G, B are the pixel values for the red, green and blue color channels, respectively, of full-resolution color image 210 (FIG. 2). In a preferred embodiment, the spectral responses of the red, green, blue, and panchromatic pixels are measured, as illustrated in FIG. 6, and the full-resolution synthetic panchromatic image 212 is calculated as the weighted linear combination of red, green and blue that gives a best fit with the panchromatic curve.

Referring to the graph of FIG. 6, there are shown the relative spectral sensitivities of pixels with red, green, and blue color filters in a typical camera application. The X-axis in FIG. 6 represents light wavelength in nanometers, spanning wavelengths approximately from the near ultraviolet to near infrared, and the Y-axis represents efficiency (normalized). In FIG. 6, a bandwidth filter curve 610 represents the spectral transmission characteristic of a typical bandwidth filter used to block infrared and ultraviolet light from reaching the image sensor. Such a filter is needed because the color filters used for image sensors typically do not block infrared light, hence the pixels are unable to distinguish between infrared light and light that is within the passbands of their associated color filters. The infrared blocking characteristic shown by the bandwidth filter curve 610 thus prevents infrared light from corrupting the visible light signal. The spectral quantum efficiency, i.e. the proportion of incident photons that are captured and converted into a measurable electrical signal, for a typical silicon sensor with red, green, and blue filters applied is multiplied by the spectral transmission characteristic of the infrared blocking filter represented by bandwidth filter curve 610 to produce the combined system quantum efficiencies represented by a red photoresponse curve 614 for the red color channel, a green photoresponse curve 616 for the green color channel, and a blue photoresponse curve 618 for the blue color channel. It is understood from these curves that each color photoresponse is sensitive to only a portion of the visible spectrum. By contrast, the photoresponse of the same silicon sensor that does not have color filters applied (but including the infrared blocking filter characteristic) is shown by a panchromatic photoresponse curve 612 for the panchromatic channel. By comparing the color photoresponse curves 614, 616, and 618 to the panchromatic photoresponse curve 612, it is clear that the panchromatic photoresponse can be two to four times more sensitive to wide spectrum light than any of the color photoresponses.

In step 214 (FIG. 2), the full-resolution panchromatic image 208 (FIG. 2), the full-resolution color image 210 (FIG. 2) and the full-resolution synthetic panchromatic image 212 (FIG. 2) are used to generate an improved full-resolution color image with reduced motion blur.

FIG. 7 is a more detailed view of step 214 (FIG. 2) of the preferred embodiment. The color correction weights generation step 702 uses the ratio of the fill-resolution panchromatic image 208 (FIG. 2) and the fill-resolution synthetic panchromatic image 212 (FIG. 2) and produces color correction weights. A color correction weight adjustment step 704 uses a nonlinear operation on the color correction weights generated by the color correction weights generation step 702 to avoid pixel overflow forming corrected color correction weights. A color improvement step 706 uses the corrected color correction weights and the full-resolution color image 210 (FIG. 2) to produce an improved fill-resolution color image 708 with reduced motion blur.

In FIG. 7, the color correction weights generation step 702 can be performed in any appropriate way known to those skilled in the art. One way to estimate the color correction weights can be described using equation (1) below:

$\begin{matrix} {{C\; C\; W} = \frac{pan}{{synthetic}\mspace{14mu} {pan}}} & (1) \end{matrix}$

where CCW is the color correction weight produced by the color correction weights generation step 702, pan is the full-resolution panchromatic image 208 (FIG. 2) and synthetic pan is the full-resolution synthetic panchromatic image 212 (FIG. 2).

In FIG. 7, the color correction weight adjustment step 704 can be performed in any appropriate way known to those skilled in the art. One way to perform color correction weight adjustment step 704 can be described using equation (2) below in which color correction weights generated by color correction weights generation step 702 are limited to values less than one:

$\begin{matrix} {{{Adj}\mspace{14mu} C\; C\; W} = \left\{ \begin{matrix} {{C\; C\; W{\mspace{11mu} \;}{if}\mspace{14mu} C\; C\; W} \leq 1} \\ {1\mspace{14mu} {otherwise}} \end{matrix} \right.} & (2) \end{matrix}$

In FIG. 7, the color improvement step 706 can be performed in any appropriate way known to those skilled in the art. One way to perform color improvement step 706 to produce a new full-resolution color image can be described using equations (3), (4) and (5) below:

R _(New) =R*(Adj CCW)   (3)

G _(New) =G*(Adj CCW)   (4)

B _(New) =B*(Adj CCW)   (5)

where R, G and B are the full-resolution red, green and blue color channel values, respectively, of full-resolution color image 210. R_(New), G_(New), and B_(New) are the full-resolution red, green and blue color channel values, respectively, of the improved full-resolution color image 708.

The color scaling algorithm disclosed in the preferred embodiments of the present invention can be employed in a variety of user contexts and environments. Exemplary contexts and environments include, without limitation, wholesale digital photofinishing (which involves exemplary process steps or stages such as digital images submitted for wholesale fulfillment, digital processing, prints out), retail digital photofinishing (digital images submitted for retail fulfillment, digital processing, prints out), home printing (home digital images in, digital processing, prints out), desktop software (software that applies algorithms to digital images to make them better—or even just to change them), digital fulfillment (digital images in—from media or over the web, digital processing, digital images out—on media, digital form over the internet), kiosks (digital images input, digital processing, prints or digital media out), mobile devices (e.g., PDA or cell phone that can be used as a processing unit, a display unit, or a unit to give processing instructions), and as a service offered via the World Wide Web.

In each case, the color scaling algorithm can stand alone or can be a component of a larger system solution. Furthermore, the interfaces with the algorithm, e.g., the input, the digital processing, the display to a user (if needed), the input of user requests or processing instructions (if needed), the output, can each be on the same or different devices and physical locations, and communication between the devices and locations can be via public or private network connections, or media based communication. Where consistent with the foregoing disclosure of the present invention, the algorithms themselves can be fully automatic, can have user input (be fully or partially manual), can have user or operator review to accept/reject the result, or can be assisted by metadata (metadata that can be user supplied, supplied by a measuring device [e.g. in a camera], or determined by an algorithm). Moreover, the algorithms can interface with a variety of workflow user interface schemes.

The color scaling algorithm disclosed herein in accordance with the invention can have interior components that utilize various data detection and reduction techniques (e.g., face detection, eye detection, skin detection, flash detection).

The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to certain preferred embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the spirit and scope of the invention.

PARTS LIST

-   10 light from subject scene -   11 imaging stage -   12 lens -   13 neutral density filter block -   14 iris block -   16 brightness sensor block -   18 shutter -   20 image sensor -   22 analog signal processor -   24 analog to digital (A/D) converter -   26 timing generator -   28 image sensor stage -   30 bus -   32 digital signal processor (DSP) memory -   36 digital signal processor (DSP) -   38 processing stage -   40 exposure controller -   50 system controller -   52 system controller bus -   54 program memory -   56 system memory -   57 host interface -   60 memory card interface -   62 memory card socket -   64 memory card -   68 user interface -   70 viewfinder display -   72 exposure display -   74 user inputs -   76 status display -   80 video encoder -   82 display controller -   88 image display -   202 Panchromatic channel -   204 Color channels -   206 CFA Interpolation block -   208 Full-resolution panchromatic image -   210 Full-resolution color image -   212 Full-resolution synthetic panchromatic image -   214 Improved full-resolution color image with reduced motion blur -   301 Color filter array pattern -   302 Panchromatic pixel -   304 Red pixel -   306 Green pixel -   308 Blue pixel -   401 First partial row of image sensor -   402 Second partial row of image sensor -   404 Floating diffusion -   406 Pixel quartet -   408 First readout combination -   410 Second readout combination -   412 Third readout combination -   502 Panchromatic pixels -   504 Color pixels -   610 Bandwidth filter curve -   612 Panchromatic photoresponse curve -   614 Red photoresponse curve -   616 Green photoresponse curve -   618 Blue photoresponse curve -   702 Color correction weights step -   704 Color correction weight adjustment step -   706 Color improvement -   708 Improved fill resolution color image 

1. A method for forming a final digital color image with reduced motion blur comprising one or more processors for providing the following steps: (a) providing images having panchromatic pixels and color pixels corresponding to at least two color channels having associated color photo responses; (b) interpolating between the panchromatic pixels to produce a full-resolution panchromatic image and interpolating between the color pixels to produce a fill-resolution color image; (c) producing a foil-resolution synthetic panchromatic image from the fill-resolution color image; (d) developing color correction weights in response to the full-resolution synthetic panchromatic image and the full-resolution panchromatic image; and (e) using the color correction weights to modify the fill-resolution color image to provide a final color digital image with reduced motion blur.
 2. The method of claim 1 wherein the panchromatic pixels and the color pixels provided in step (a) are captured with different exposure times.
 3. The method of claim 1 wherein the panchromatic pixels and the color pixels provided in step (a) are captured using a single image sensor having both panchromatic pixels and color pixels.
 4. The method of claim 1 wherein step (c) includes computing the fall-resolution synthetic panchromatic image by calculating a weighted sum of the color channels in the full-resolution color image.
 5. The method of claim 1 wherein step (d) includes computing ratios of pixels in the full-resolution panchromatic image to corresponding pixels in the fall-resolution synthetic panchromatic image.
 6. The method of claim 1 wherein step (d) includes applying a nonlinear operation on the color correction weights.
 7. The method of claim 6 wherein the color correction weights are limited to values less than or equal to one.
 8. The method of claim 1 wherein step (e) includes multiplying the fill-resolution color image by the color correction weights to provide the final color digital image 